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Query: UMLS:C0030201 (
Postoperative pain
)
1,085
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Surgery is associated with immune alterations, which are the combined result of tissue damage, anesthesia, postoperative pain, and
psychological stress
. In the present study, we compared the effects of several postoperative pain management techniques on postoperative immune function. Patients hospitalized for abdominal surgery were randomly assigned to one of three postoperative pain management techniques: opiates on demand (intermittent opiate regimen [IOR]), patient-controlled analgesia (PCA), and patient-controlled epidural analgesia (PCEA).
Postoperative pain
was assessed. Blood samples were collected before and 24, 48, and 72 h after surgery. Production of interleukin (IL)-1beta, IL-2, and IL-6, natural killer cell cytotoxicity, and lymphocyte mitogenic responses were assessed. Patients of the PCEA group exhibited lower pain scores in the first 24 h after surgery compared with patients of the IOR and PCA groups. Mitogenic responses were suppressed in all groups in the first 24 h, returned to preoperative values by 72 h in the PCEA group, but remained suppressed in the PCA group. Production of IL-1beta and IL-6 increased in the IOR and PCA groups, whereas it remained almost unchanged in the PCEA group. Patients receiving an epidural mixture of opiate and local anesthetics (PCEA group) exhibited reduced suppression of lymphocyte proliferation and attenuated proinflammatory cytokine response in the postoperative period.
...
PMID:The effects of postoperative pain management on immune response to surgery. 1293 9
The postoperative period is accompanied with neuroendocrine, metabolic and immune alteration which is caused by tissue damage, anesthesia, postoperative pain and
psychological stress
.
Postoperative pain
contributes to dysfunction of immune response as a result of interaction between central nervous and immune system. The postoperatively activated hypotalamo-pituitary-adrenocortical axis, sympathic and parasympathic nerve systems are important modulators of immune response. According to bidirectional communication of immune and nervous system, appropriate postoperative pain management could affect immune response in postoperative period. Although the postoperative suppression of immune response has been reported, a very little are known about the influences of different pain management techniques on cytotoxic function of immune cells in patients with colorectal cancer in early postoperative period. Perforin is a cytotoxic molecule expressed by activated lymphocytes which has a crucial role in elimination of tumor cells and virus-infected cells, mostly during the effector's phase of immune response. Immune compromise during the postoperative period could affect the healing processes, incidence of postoperative infections and rate and size of tumor metastases disseminated during operation. The pharmacological management of postoperative pain in patients with malignancies uses very different analgesic techniques whose possible influence on cytotoxic functions of immune cells are still understood poor. For decades the most common way of treating postoperative pain after colorectal cancer surgery was intravenous analgesia with opiods. In the last decade many investigations pointed out that opiods can also contribute to postoperative suppression of immune response. Epidural analgesia is a regional anesthesia technique that acts directly on the origin of pain impulses and pain relief can be achieved with small doses of opiods combined with local anesthetics. Local anesthetics potentate analgesic properties of opiods but per se are also acting as antiinflammatory drugs. Afferent neural blockade by epidural analgesia attenuates neuroendocrine stress response. We propose that epidural analgesia could be more convenient that intravenous analgesia in maintenance of immunological homeostasis that is altered by surgical stress, tumor growth and pain.
...
PMID:The proposed mechanism of action during different pain management techniques on expression of cytolytic molecule perforin in patients after colorectal cancer surgery. 2119 59